Getting Active
Saturday, December 27, 2014 @ 4:06 AM
Prince George, B.C. – The turkey leftovers are being served up, and the treats have been gobbled down and rather than be a couch potato through the rest of the holidays, you are being prodded to get active and stay active throughout the year.
There are several ways to be active both inside the home and out, and here are some of those ideas provided by the Provincial secretary for Active Living:
- Set small, achievable goals, such as running on the spot during the commercials of your favourite TV show or committing to walking 20 minutes a day. Whatever it is, the sooner you commit to it, the sooner you will
feel the benefits. - Create an activity calendar for a month, with daily goals – such as going for a swim or playing a game of tag. If you have kids, ask them to help create the goals.
- Keep it simple and just go for a short walk! It doesn’t have to be outdoors – find a local community centre with a running track, pop into a mall, or walk around your office building with co-workers. Any opportunity to rack up the recommended 10,000 steps a day is a good one.
- Visiting a friend out of town? Pack your workout gear and make a point of joining them at their gym/workout class.
- Embrace the cold and snow. Make a day of it or just take an hour. Bundle up and go tobogganing, build a snowman, try snowshoeing or hit the mountains to go skiing.
- Involve the kids. Children need between 60 and 180 minutes of physical activity a day, so try joining them for a game in the backyard. Enjoy a family walk after dinner to check out the holiday decorations in your neighbourhood.
- Get the whole family together and have a dance party. Crank the tunes and have fun while you do the dishes!
- Use the Internet. While more screen time is not usually associated with active living, you can use it to learn the basics of a new dance, yoga or tai chi to find out if you like it before committing to formal instruction or classes.
- Check out your local parks and recreation center. They have activities to suit all ages, budgets and schedules – allowing you to be active and meet new people.
Adults should get at least 150 minutes of physical activity a week in sessions of 10 minutes or more. That’s just over 20 minutes a day. It doesn’t sound like much, but those 20 minutes can help reduce the risk of premature death, heart disease and stroke among other health benefits, and be fun.
Comments
I think PG is really lucky to have a facility like the NSC. I used to use it quite a bit when I lived there, the indoor track was great. For those of you who haven’t tried it yet, I’d encourage you to check it out.
Grinch says “shovel the damn driveway or I’m taking your Christmas presents back”.
They are to busy watching bad drivers no time for physical activities’.
Cheers
I usually do shovel my driveway, as I find its a good way to get some fresh air and a bit of exercise at the same time. There are loads of people who probably shouldn’t though given the potential health risks. It is a big cardiac risk for certain pockets of the population, especially those who aren’t all that active.
They have snow in Ottawa? Thought there was enough heat from politicians to melt it all.
cheers
Hey joggers! Stay the hell out of the traveled portion of the streets, yer just showing your low IQ when you do that. And a poor example to kids.
Otherwise, the best exercise is walking, a superb workout, don’t worry about falling, just get out and do it.
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